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President Donald Trump says the U.S. is being invaded by a Venezuelan gang, and he points to that as the reason he can invoke an 18th century law to deport alleged gang members without due process.
Trump cites the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport a Venezuelan gang, calling it an invasion, but legal experts disagree.
The Trump administration says the group should be treated as an invading force. Critics say it’s a pretext for the ...
Internal DHS and FBI documents question the effectiveness of using tattoos to identify Venezuelan members of Tren de Aragua.
Relatives of some Venezuelan deportees believe the men were targeted as Tren de Aragua members based on their tattoos, but a ...
“Once these prisoners realized they had more weapons and more power than the military force guarding them, they assumed ...
Tren de Aragua was originally a prison gang that Hector Guerrero Flores turned into a "transnational criminal organisation", ...
Tren de Aragua grew and operated out of a prison run by Venezuela government officials with the government's knowledge, Ronna Risquez, a Venezuelan investigative journalist who published a book ...
they assumed control and administration,” Ronna Rísquez, author of a book on the Tren de Aragua, said. Guerrero and others established an organization within the prison that controlled the ...
Though a federal judge blocked him, more than 200 migrants accused by U.S. officials of being part of Tren de Aragua were flown to an El Salvador ... is money,” said Ronna Rísquez, an ...
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